Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2014 Harley-davidson Flhx - Street Glide on 2040-motos

US $19000
YearYear:2014 MileageMileage:35 ColorColor: Red
Location:

Fort Worth, Texas, United States

Fort Worth, Texas, United States
QR code
2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 1

Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide photos

2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 2 2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 3 2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 4 2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 5 2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 6 2014 Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide, US $19000, image 7

Harley-Davidson FLHX - Street Glide description

Moto blog

EICMA 2013: Harley-Davidson Revolution X 750 & 500

Mon, 04 Nov 2013

The Street 750 and Street 500 from Harley-Davidson represent the first all-new platform from Harley-Davidson in 13 years. Built for urban environments, the Street series machines fall under the Dark Custom design and are intended for young, urban riders. The two motorcycles feature the new liquid-cooled Revolution X engine, a narrow, agile chassis with a low seat height (26.3 inches), new suspension, a wide handlebar and minimalist styling. Not all markets will get both engine sizes, but the U.S.

AMA Honors Zero and Scot Harden with Bessie Stringfield Award

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

The American Motorcyclist Association has bestowed a special recognition award to Zero Motorcycles and its Vice President of Marketing, Hall-of-Famer Scot Harden, for their work in attracting new riders and the positive impact they’ve delivered to mainstream media. Harden (pictured above from our recent Zero FX dirt riding review) and Zero were awarded the AMA Bessie Stringfield Award which recognizes individuals who have been instrumental in bringing emerging markets to motorcycling. The award is named after 2002 AMA Hall of Fame inductee Bessie Stringfield, the first African-American woman to ride solo across the United States and a civilian motorcycle dispatch rider for the army in World War II.

Man Waits 38 Years To Buy Motorcycle, Dies Three Miles Later

Thu, 18 Jul 2013

Barry Strang’s story is a tragic case of being careful what you wish for. Since they were newlyweds, Strang would ask his wife, Pam, if he could get a motorcycle. Fearful of the dangers involved, she said no.